#16
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For me, this is one of those parts that seems expensive after tax and shipping, but November solved a problem and I’ll therefore gladly pay them as a thank you.
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#17
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In the case of the shims in question they have a few sets available now (in local inventory) and 25 more available (at QBP warehouse). So, again, if you don't want to pay Universal's shipping on a cheap item then ask you LBS to order from Q. |
#18
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#19
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I hear ya, but what do you expect to pay for such a thing? Yes, it's a thin piece of metal but it's custom designed for a narrow purpose. The selling costs aren't in the material on an item like this.
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#20
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Looks like $16 for 4 and free shipping from November. Not exactly a big ticket item by any means.
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#21
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I use November shims. I can freely swap wheels without any rub.
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#22
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Cool. Purchased two packs of 4.
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#23
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#24
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If you ride 1 bike with these shims for 5 years, this amounts to $6.25 a year, or about $0.52 per month. Imagine foregoing a latte, every year, in order to improve your disc alignment. Seems more than reasonable to me. |
#25
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Sure - I get that this a drop in the bucket. My experience is that when maintaining nearly a dozen bikes that each of them need "a drop in the bucket" over and over again. So a bike needs bar tape...get the nice stuff, it's just $40... new cables... pedals... different stem for a growing kid... chains... tires...
I'm just here trying to keep bikes running for as little cost as is practicable. I do all my own brake bleeds, bb swaps, and so on so that I can keep everything running well. I always check around for alternatives... buying the tires that are on sale, patching tubes, finding small parts at the local co-op. When I can't find an alternative, I go with what I need - so I bought a couple sets of the November shims in this case. |
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